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Fond & Flame

Chapters · Kitchen Essentials

Poached Eggs with Hollandaise on Brioche Toast

Where every culinary journey begins — knife skills, mise en place, and the vegetable techniques that form the foundation of all cooking.

★ Beginner$25 min
Poached Eggs with Hollandaise on Brioche Toast — Kitchen Essentials — recipe plated and ready to serve

Foundations Referenced

Ingredients

  • 4 large eggs (the freshest you can find — fresh whites hold together better)
  • 1 tbsp white vinegar
  • 1/2 cup hollandaise sauce (→ foundation)
  • 2 thick slices brioche or sourdough, toasted
  • 4 slices Canadian bacon or smoked salmon (optional)
  • Chives, minced
  • Flaky salt, cracked pepper
  • Pinch of smoked paprika

Method

  1. Make hollandaise first (→ foundation). Keep warm in a thermos or bowl set over barely warm water. Hollandaise waits for nothing — make it, hold it, use it.

  2. Prep the poaching water: Fill a wide, deep saucepan with 3" of water. Add vinegar. Bring to a bare simmer (180°F — tiny bubbles clinging to the bottom, no rolling boil). Reduce heat to maintain.

  3. Strain the eggs: Crack each egg into a fine-mesh strainer over a bowl. The watery, loose whites drain away — this is the secret to clean, compact poached eggs without wispy tentacles.

  4. Poach: Gently swirl the water. Slide eggs in one at a time, spacing them apart. Cook 3–3.5 min for a runny yolk. The whites should be fully set but the yolk should feel soft when gently pressed.

  5. Assemble: Toast brioche. Layer Canadian bacon (if using), then poached egg (drained on paper towel). Spoon hollandaise generously over. Garnish with chives, flaky salt, pepper, and a dusting of smoked paprika.

What You're Learning

  • Poaching: the gentlest cooking method. Temperature control is everything — too hot and the whites shred.
  • The strainer trick eliminates the #1 cause of ugly poached eggs (loose whites)
  • Hollandaise is your first emulsified butter sauce — the same technique returns in Ch.03 as béarnaise
  • Timing: hollandaise must be ready before you poach. This is your first exercise in multi-component coordination.
  • Fresh eggs poach better because the whites are thicker and more cohesive

The Science

Egg whites begin to coagulate at 144°F and are fully set by 158°F. The yolk sets at a higher temperature (around 158–170°F). By poaching at 180°F, the whites set quickly while the yolk, insulated in the center, stays runny. Vinegar lowers the pH of the water, which causes the egg white proteins to denature (coagulate) faster, helping them set before they can spread.

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